Vertebral osteomyelitis: Difference between revisions

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*[[Staphylococcus aureus]]
*[[Staphylococcus aureus]]
*Other [[Gram-positive cocci]], including [[viridans group streptococci]], [[Streptococcus bovis]], [[enterococci]], [[Streptococcus agalactiae]], group C and G [[streptococci]]
*Other [[Gram-positive cocci]], including [[viridans group streptococci]], [[Streptococcus bovis]], [[enterococci]], [[Streptococcus agalactiae]], group C and G [[streptococci]]
*Less commonly, [[coagulase-negative staphylococci]], [[Gram-negative bacilli]], including [[Pseudomonas aeruginosa]], and [[Candida species]], especially in patients with indwelling lines or injection drug use
*Less commonly, [[coagulase-negative staphylococci]], [[Gram-negative bacilli]], including [[Pseudomonas aeruginosa]], and [[Candida]], especially in patients with indwelling lines or injection drug use
*[[Tuberculosis]]
*[[Tuberculosis]]
*[[Brucella melitensis|Brucella]], in patients from endemic countries, can be as high as 25% of cases
*[[Brucella melitensis|Brucella]], in patients from endemic countries, can be as high as 25% of cases
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* Often treated with retention of hardware, especially in early-onset disease[[CiteRef::atesok2020fa]]
* Often treated with retention of hardware, especially in early-onset disease[[CiteRef::atesok2020fa]]
* Early onset (<4 to 6 weeks post-op)
* Early onset (<4 to 6 weeks post-op)
** I&D with retention of hardware and bone graft material, with primary closure over a drain if feasible
** I&D with retention of hardware and bone graft material, with primary closure instead of a drain, if feasible
* Late onset (more than 4 to 6 weeks post-op)
* Late onset (more than 4 to 6 weeks post-op)
** Fusion achieved: incision and drainage with removal of hardware
** Fusion achieved: incision and drainage with removal of hardware

Latest revision as of 23:17, 12 March 2022

Background

Microbiology

Management

Brucella

With Orthopedic Hardware

  • Often treated with retention of hardware, especially in early-onset disease1
  • Early onset (<4 to 6 weeks post-op)
    • I&D with retention of hardware and bone graft material, with primary closure instead of a drain, if feasible
  • Late onset (more than 4 to 6 weeks post-op)
    • Fusion achieved: incision and drainage with removal of hardware
    • Fusion not achieved: retention of hardware with suppressive antibiotics until fusion is achieved, then removal of hardware

Prognosis

  • Cure rates are 70-90% with 6 weeks of antibiotics, and are not higher with longer durations (per a single RCT)
  • Poor prognosis is associated with multidisc disease, the presence of concomitant epidural abscess, lack of surgical therapy, infection with S. aureus, old age, or the presence of significant comorbidities

References

  1. ^  Kivanc Atesok, Alexander Vaccaro, Martina Stippler, Brendan M. Striano, Michael Carr, Michael Heffernan, Steven Theiss, Efstathios Papavassiliou. Fate of Hardware in Spinal Infections. Surgical Infections. 2020;21(5):404-410. doi:10.1089/sur.2019.206.